Hi guys.
I am so lucky to have found this forum. Looking over some other threads, there are some really nice and helpful people on here. Hope you can help me make an informed decision because sometimes books don't have the answers one is looking for.
Bio: I had no direction in undergrads (generally sciences) but mostly because of some mental health issues in the family, I found myself interested in psychology. I got my psych degree, worked as a research assistant and all that, got two interviews out of fifteen, got into a respectable PhD grad program on a full scholarship. However, I got a year long leave after I did a single year of study because the issues in my family were still going on and me being a very sensitive person and also close with my family, could not focus on my studies being an ocean away from them. Of course, a year into my coming back home, things took a turn for the worse and I ended up having to seek treatment for my own mental health issues. For various reasons, I could not get my medical leave extended and so I was officially let go by my program the following year.
It has taken me quite a few years but I have worked through my own stuff and thankfully recently my family issues have finally stabilized as well. So here I am, in my early 30s now, and trying to decide once again how to proceed in my life. I think if I want to go back to grad school, I have to start from zero. I need to retake GRE, start doing research/volunteer work, and take a few classes--and do very well in them. Because I don't think me getting A's ten years ago means anything in a grad school application evaluated today. So I'm thinking at least two to three years from now before I can be considered competitive. And then you add another five to eight years: to complete the program, do internship, a year or two of postdoc and get licensed. So I would be, say, 43 and with 200k+ of loans, starting to practice (or teach or do research...or more likely, all three).
So, what do you think? Is it worth it given the state of the field (job security, salary, etc) to make this kind of investment in my future?
What other realistic options are available for a person like me then, with only a bachelor's degree in psychology? I am an introvert, intuitive and very sensitive, and I very much love learning. So don't say business. 🙂 I don't have the, well, overconfidence and that go-getter attitude necessary to succeed in business--which is what pretty much everybody has told me to go into. A friend of mine, a recent psych graduate told me while a salesman she knows--who has no college degree--has made over half a million bucks in the last ten years, she has amassed half that amount in debt. That's sad.
I have looked at sociology and anthroplogy, which happen to be close enough to psychology and generally in tune with my personality and values, but also philosophy (I loved my history and philosophy of clinical psychology in first year of grad school, more so than courses in assessment or research seminar.) But those programs require two years of upper level undergrad courses in those areas for starters, so for PhD we're looking at as many years of study as clinical psych, and with a career that has an even more uncertain future. A sociologist I know is working as a statistician on a research project, along side a masters in clinical psych. Go figure.
Sorry about the long post. I appreciate any help.
I am so lucky to have found this forum. Looking over some other threads, there are some really nice and helpful people on here. Hope you can help me make an informed decision because sometimes books don't have the answers one is looking for.
Bio: I had no direction in undergrads (generally sciences) but mostly because of some mental health issues in the family, I found myself interested in psychology. I got my psych degree, worked as a research assistant and all that, got two interviews out of fifteen, got into a respectable PhD grad program on a full scholarship. However, I got a year long leave after I did a single year of study because the issues in my family were still going on and me being a very sensitive person and also close with my family, could not focus on my studies being an ocean away from them. Of course, a year into my coming back home, things took a turn for the worse and I ended up having to seek treatment for my own mental health issues. For various reasons, I could not get my medical leave extended and so I was officially let go by my program the following year.
It has taken me quite a few years but I have worked through my own stuff and thankfully recently my family issues have finally stabilized as well. So here I am, in my early 30s now, and trying to decide once again how to proceed in my life. I think if I want to go back to grad school, I have to start from zero. I need to retake GRE, start doing research/volunteer work, and take a few classes--and do very well in them. Because I don't think me getting A's ten years ago means anything in a grad school application evaluated today. So I'm thinking at least two to three years from now before I can be considered competitive. And then you add another five to eight years: to complete the program, do internship, a year or two of postdoc and get licensed. So I would be, say, 43 and with 200k+ of loans, starting to practice (or teach or do research...or more likely, all three).
So, what do you think? Is it worth it given the state of the field (job security, salary, etc) to make this kind of investment in my future?
What other realistic options are available for a person like me then, with only a bachelor's degree in psychology? I am an introvert, intuitive and very sensitive, and I very much love learning. So don't say business. 🙂 I don't have the, well, overconfidence and that go-getter attitude necessary to succeed in business--which is what pretty much everybody has told me to go into. A friend of mine, a recent psych graduate told me while a salesman she knows--who has no college degree--has made over half a million bucks in the last ten years, she has amassed half that amount in debt. That's sad.
I have looked at sociology and anthroplogy, which happen to be close enough to psychology and generally in tune with my personality and values, but also philosophy (I loved my history and philosophy of clinical psychology in first year of grad school, more so than courses in assessment or research seminar.) But those programs require two years of upper level undergrad courses in those areas for starters, so for PhD we're looking at as many years of study as clinical psych, and with a career that has an even more uncertain future. A sociologist I know is working as a statistician on a research project, along side a masters in clinical psych. Go figure.
Sorry about the long post. I appreciate any help.